Difference between revisions of "ARM11 Interrupts"
Line 236: | Line 236: | ||
| 0x60 | | 0x60 | ||
| gpio, TwlBg | | gpio, TwlBg | ||
− | | Shell opened | + | | Shell opened (GPIO1_2 falling edge) |
|- | |- | ||
| 0x62 | | 0x62 | ||
| gpio, TwlBg | | gpio, TwlBg | ||
− | | Shell closed | + | | Shell closed (GPIO1_2 rising edge) |
|- | |- | ||
| 0x63 | | 0x63 | ||
| gpio, TwlBg | | gpio, TwlBg | ||
− | | | + | | Touch Pen Down (GPIO1_1 falling edge) |
|- | |- | ||
| 0x64 | | 0x64 |
Revision as of 17:45, 24 January 2021
Interrupts
Interrupt priority is 0-0xF. A priority of 0xF means that the interrupt is disabled.
Private Interrupts
Each CPU core has 32 software interrupts that are private and belong to that core. These interrupts are numbers 0-0x1F for each core. The hardware interrupts are not core-specific and start at interrupt ID 0x20.
IRQ | Listener | Description |
---|---|---|
0 | MPCore software-interrupt. Not configured. | |
0x1-0x3 | MPCore software-interrupt. Used by Boot11 and Kernel11 to kickstart Core1/2/3. | |
0x4 | Kernel | MPCore software-interrupt. Used to manage the performance counter. |
0x5 | Kernel | MPCore software-interrupt. Does apparently nothing. |
0x6 | Kernel | MPCore software-interrupt. Extensively used by KernelSetState (and contains most of the actual code of the latter). |
0x7 | Kernel | MPCore software-interrupt. See KCacheMaintenanceInterruptEvent |
0x8 | Kernel | MPCore software-interrupt. Used for scheduling. |
0x9 | Kernel | MPCore software-interrupt. Used when handling exceptions that require termination of a thread or a process, and in some cases by svcSetDebugThreadContext, to store VFP registers in the thread's register storage. |
0xA | Kernel | TLB operations interrupt, see KTLBOperationsInterruptEvent |
0xB-0xE | MPCore software-interrupt. Not configured. | |
0xF | dmnt/debugger | MPCore software-interrupt. Used to abstract FIQ (debug). This interrupt is never sent to core2 nor core3 on N3DS. |
0x1D | Kernel | MPCore timer. |
0x1E | Kernel | MPCore watchdog - set when the watchdog counter reaches 0 in timer mode, causes interrupt 30 to set as pending. Only set on core 1 as core 1's timer is used for everything. |
Hardware Interrupts
There are 0x60 hardware interrupts starting at 0x20 and continuing up to 0x7F. These are not private and are accessible from any core.
IRQ | Listener | Description |
---|---|---|
0x24 | ? | SPI bus 2 interrupt status update |
0x28 | gsp, TwlBg | PSC0 |
0x29 | gsp, TwlBg | PSC1 |
0x2A | gsp, TwlBg | PDC0 (VBlank0) |
0x2B | gsp, TwlBg | PDC1 (VBlank1) |
0x2C | gsp, TwlBg | PPF |
0x2D | gsp, TwlBg | P3D |
0x30-0x38 | Kernel | Old CDMA Event 0..8 (9 separate IRQ lines) |
0x39 | Kernel | Old CDMA Faulting (eg. CCR=0, or event>15) |
0x3A | Kernel | New CDMA Event 0..31 (shared IRQ line) |
0x3B | Kernel | New CDMA Faulting (eg. CCR=0) |
0x40 | nwm | WIFI SDIO Controller @ 0x10122000 |
0x41 | nwm | WIFI SDIO Controller IRQ pin @ 0x10122000 |
0x42 | nwm_dev? | Debug WIFI SDIO Controller @ 0x10100000 ? |
0x43 | nwm_dev? | Debug WIFI SDIO Controller @ 0x10100000 ? |
0x44 | ? | NTRCARD (maybe?) |
0x45 | mvd (New3DS) | L2B_0 (First RGB-to-RGBA Converter) |
0x46 | mvd (New3DS) | L2B_1 (Second RGB-to-RGBA Converter) |
0x48 | camera | Camera Bus 0 (DSi cameras) |
0x49 | camera | Camera Bus 1 (left-eye) |
0x4A | dsp | General interrupt from DSP, including semaphore and command/reply registers status change |
0x4B | camera | Y2R Conversion Finished |
0x4C | TwlBg | LGYFB_0 Legacy GBA/NDS Video |
0x4D | TwlBg | LGYFB_1 Legacy GBA/NDS Video |
0x4E | mvd (New3DS) | Y2R2 End Event |
0x4F | mvd (New3DS) | MVD general interrupt? |
0x50 | pxi, TwlBg | Sync (bit 29 from Arm9's PXI_SYNC) |
0x51 | pxi, TwlBg | Sync 2 (bit 30 from Arm9's PXI_SYNC) |
0x52 | pxi, TwlBg | Send Fifo Empty |
0x53 | pxi, TwlBg | Receive Fifo Not Empty |
0x54 | i2c, TwlBg | I2C Bus0 work done |
0x55 | i2c, TwlBg | I2C Bus1 work done |
0x56 | spi, TwlBg | SPI bus 3 interrupt status update |
0x57 | spi, TwlBg | SPI bus 1 interrupt status update |
0x58 | Kernel | PDN (wake event or SoC mode changed) |
0x59 | TwlBg | PDN Legacy Sleep |
0x5A | mic | General microphone interrupt (?) |
0x5B | - | HID_PAD_CNT |
0x5C | i2c, TwlBg | I2C Bus2 work done |
0x5F | mp | DS WiFi registers |
0x60 | gpio, TwlBg | Shell opened (GPIO1_2 falling edge) |
0x62 | gpio, TwlBg | Shell closed (GPIO1_2 rising edge) |
0x63 | gpio, TwlBg | Touch Pen Down (GPIO1_1 falling edge) |
0x64 | gpio, TwlBg | Headphone jack plugged in/out |
0x66 | gpio, TwlBg | GPIO2_1 |
0x68 | gpio, TwlBg | C-stick Interrupt |
0x69 | gpio, TwlBg | IrDA Interrupt |
0x6A | gpio, TwlBg | Gyro Interrupt |
0x6B | gpio, TwlBg | GPIO3_3 |
0x6C | gpio, TwlBg | GPIO3_4 |
0x6D | gpio, TwlBg | GPIO3_5 |
0x6E | gpio, TwlBg | GPIO3_6 |
0x6F | gpio, TwlBg | GPIO3_7 |
0x70 | gpio, TwlBg | GPIO3_8 |
0x71 | gpio, TwlBg | MCU (HOME/POWER pressed/released or WiFi switch pressed, etc.) |
0x72 | gpio, TwlBg | NFC |
0x73 | TwlBg | GPIO3_11 |
0x74 | ? | Gamecard related |
0x75 | ? | Gamecard inserted |
0x76 | - | L2C |
0x78 to 0x7B | Kernel | Core 0-3 Performance monitor counter (any) overflow |
0x7A to 0x82 (PDN_MPCORE_CFG bit2 set) or
0x7C to 0x84 (bit2 clear) |
Kernel | Other PMU interrupts (line may not exist at all) |
(interrupts from 0x80 and up can't be mapped in available builds of the kernel)
There are 2 tables in the Arm11 kernel: the first has 32 * 2(or 32 * 4) 8-byte entries. This table is for the private interrupts that belong to each core. The data for each interrupt can be found by doing table_base + (core_num * 0x100) + (intr_num * 8). The second table is for public hardware interrupts and the data for each interrupt can be retrieved by doing table_base + (intr_num * 8).
The Arm11 kernel configures interrupts the following way (it seems the GPIO IRQ layout doesn't match released 3DS models):
Interrupts 0x00 to 0x1F: edge-triggered, N-N Interrupt 0x20: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x21: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x22: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x23: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x24: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x25: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x28: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x29: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x2a: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x2b: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x2c: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x2d: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x30: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x31: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x32: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x33: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x34: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x35: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x36: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x37: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x38: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x39: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x3a: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x3b: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x40: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x41: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x42: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x43: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x44: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x45: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x46: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x48: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x49: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x4a: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x4b: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x4c: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x4d: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x4e: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x4f: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x50: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x51: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x52: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x53: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x54: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x55: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x56: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x57: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x58: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x59: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x5a: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x5b: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x5f: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x60: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x61: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x64: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x65: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x66: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x68: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x69: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x6a: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x6b: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x6c: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x6d: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x6e: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x6f: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x70: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x71: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x72: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x73: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x74: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x75: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x76: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x77: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x78: edge-triggered, 1-N Interrupt 0x79: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x7a: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x7b: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x7c: level-sensitive, 1-N Interrupt 0x7d: level-sensitive, 1-N
InterruptData
Offset | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
0x0 | KBaseInterruptEvent * | Pointer to the KBaseInterruptEvent object for this interrupt |
0x4 | u8 | Interrupt will be disabled by the IRQ handler as soon as it is acknowledged.
Ignored for FIQ: the FIQ handler always sets bit2 of PDN_FIQ_CNT |
0x5 | u8 | Interrupt is disabled |
0x6 | u8 | Interrupt priority |
0x7 | u8 | Unused, alignment |
Interrupt Table (New3DS)
(0xFFF318F4 in 10.3)
Offset | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
0x0 | InterruptData[224] | Data for all hardware and software interrupts |
0x700 | KObjectMutex | Mutex |